Deployment Psychology Blog

By the Numbers: 15 June 2020

20.8%

The percentage of a "nationally representative sample of trauma-exposed U.S. veterans" who "reported experiencing mild-to-severe dissociative symptoms," according to an article recently published online in the Journal of Affective Disorders -- Dissociative Symptoms in a Nationally Representative Sample of Trauma-Exposed U.S. Military Veterans: Prevalence, Comorbidities, and Suicidality

Research Update: 11 June 2020

Research Update Icon

The weekly Research Update contains the latest news, journal articles, useful links from around the web. Some of this week's topics include:
● Advances in PTSD Treatment Delivery: Evidence Base and Future Directions for Intensive Outpatient Programs.
● The efficacy of cognitive and behavior therapies for insomnia on daytime symptoms: A systematic review and network meta-analysis.
● Napping and weekend catchup sleep do not fully compensate for high rates of sleep debt and short sleep at a population level (in a representative nationwide sample of 12,637 adults).

Staff Perspective: Learning to Live with Danger

Dr. Deb Nofziger

The other night, I was talking with a neighbor about my irritation with loved ones whom I viewed as having an extreme reaction to the current pandemic. When I talk with others and hear about how worried and anxious they are -- and what I view as over-the-top rituals they perform to sanitize their world -- I have found myself getting frustrated with them and trying to convince them that they don’t have to be so worried. At the same time, I am worried about my own reaction, or perceived lack thereof. Is there something wrong with them… or me?

Guest Perspective: Because We Care - Risk for Moral Injury During the Covid-19 Pandemic

For all its power to terrify, Covid-19 can’t keep us from marveling at the courage of frontline human service workers all over the world. They are braving not only the physical dangers of repeated exposure to the deadly virus, but also the emotional dangers of empathically sharing so much suffering with so many, and the moral dangers of possibly being unable to save every savable life, such as when intensive care services become overwhelmed. Their courage seems all the more remarkable given that all three of these dangers are invisible, operating mostly outside of anyone’s immediate awareness.

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